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Sam Bankman-Fried arrested in Bahamas as US files FTX charges

The disgraced co-founder of digital-asset exchange FTX was arrested in the Bahamas after the US government filed a criminal indictment, following weeks of speculation that client funds were misused before his empire’s collapse.
Bloomberg
FTX Cryptocurrency Derivatives Exchange CEO Sam Bankman-Fried Interview Sam Bankman-Fried (Photo: Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg)

Bankman-Fried is being held in custody pending an extradition process, the island nation’s attorney general, Ryan Pinder, said in a statement on Monday. 

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan plan to unseal the case against him on Tuesday morning, “and will have more to say at that time”, Damian Williams, US attorney for the Southern District of New York, said. He didn’t elaborate on the allegations.

The Securities and Exchange Commission separately authorised civil charges relating to Bankman-Fried’s violations of securities laws, Enforcement Director Gurbir Grewal said. Those civil charges are expected to be filed publicly in Manhattan on Tuesday, according to the statement. 

The White House declined to comment on the arrest and charges.

House Financial Services Committee chairwoman Maxine Waters told reporters on Monday that the panel still plans to hold its hearing on FTX’s collapse. “It’s important for the American public to understand FTX and what was going on,” she said.

Bankman-Fried has been facing investigations in the US and the Bahamas, where the company was headquartered, into a range of possible misconduct. One key inquiry has been whether customer funds were lent out to trading firm Alameda Research, which Bankman-Fried also founded.  

More than 100 FTX-related entities filed for US bankruptcy protections on 11 November. 

Bankman-Fried, 30, is being held at a local police station in the Bahamas and his arraignment is scheduled for Tuesday, according to a person familiar with the matter.

In media interviews since FTX’s collapse, Bankman-Fried has admitted major managerial missteps, but has also claimed that he never tried to commit fraud or break the law.

In his remarks prepared for a US House hearing that Bankman-Fried was scheduled to appear at on Tuesday, he offered a blunt assessment of his plight. 

“I would like to start by formally stating under oath: I f—-ked up,” Bankman-Fried said in a draft copy of his remarks obtained by Bloomberg News. 

He added that the company’s new managers, led by restructuring expert John J. Ray III, have repeatedly rebuffed his offers to help sift through the wreckage of the collapsed crypto empire. Ray, who’s now leading the company, hasn’t responded to five of his emails, he said. 

Prior to the arrest and long before his empire collapsed into bankruptcy, federal prosecutors in Manhattan had already been looking into FTX as part of a broader sweep of exchanges and potential anti-money laundering violations under the Bank Secrecy Act.

The investigation, led by the Complex Frauds and Cybercrime Unit, took a different trajectory after FTX’s catastrophic implosion.

Prosecutors were closely examining whether hundreds of millions of dollars were improperly transferred to the Bahamas around the time of FTX’s bankruptcy filing in Delaware, according to a person familiar with the matter.

They were also digging into whether FTX broke the law by transferring funds to Alameda Research, the bankrupt investment firm also founded by Bankman-Fried, Bloomberg reported previously.

Last week, prosecutors, the FBI, Department of Justice officials and FTX’s new CEO and restructuring expert John Jay Ray III met at SDNY’s headquarters in central Manhattan. Potential charges were not discussed at that meeting, according to a person familiar with the conversation. BM/DM

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Bruce Anderson 13 December 2022 01:47 PM

The fallen Crypto Empire of Sam Bankman-Fried will simply become another expired monument to the toxic combination of hubris and greed that is far too prevalent across most, if not all, societies. Clearly the hype of easy money, the endorsements of celebrity “influencers” who are little more than the equivalent of financial market pimps, (most already significantly more wealthy than they deserve), and the gullibility of the social media addicted FOMO fearing lemmings seeking acceptance from the cool corner, was a major contributor. But how does that explain significant investments by Sequoia, Blackrock, Softbank, amongst others? One would think that an interview with the CEO of trading arm Alameda Research, Caroline Ellison, might have raised a red flag, or some enquiry as to what corporate governance was in place (none). The losses by hedge funds are being poo poo’d away as small in their portfolio’s but it does beg the question, what other depth charges are in their curated investment portfolio’s that are nothing more than a blind swing for the fences?